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The landscape of art arbitration in China shifted on 1 March 2026, when the revised Arbitration Law of the People’s Republic of China entered into force. Promulgated on 12 September 2025, the new statute introduces modernised rules on competence–competence, interim measures and enforcement that directly affect how galleries, auction houses, artists and collectors resolve disputes over exhibitions, loans, consignment arrangements and authentication claims. For an art market that generated hundreds of billions of renminbi in transactions last year, with a growing share involving cross-border parties, the reforms demand immediate attention to contract drafting, dispute-resolution strategy and enforcement planning. This guide sets out what changed, what it means for art disputes in China, and what practitioners should do right now.
Five immediate actions for art-sector decision-makers:
The revised Arbitration Law replaces the 1994 statute that governed Chinese arbitration for three decades. The original law was China’s first national legislation on arbitration, designed primarily for domestic economic disputes. Over time, the limitations of the 1994 framework became increasingly apparent as cross-border transactions, including in the art sector, grew in volume and complexity. The 2025 revision responds to those limitations with a series of structural reforms.
The key changes relevant to art disputes in China include:
| Date | Instrument / Event | Practical Implication for Art Sector |
|---|---|---|
| 12 September 2025 | Promulgation of revised Arbitration Law | Policy intent confirmed; institutions and practitioners begin preparing for new rules. |
| 1 March 2026 | Entry into force | All contracts executed on or after this date are governed by the new law; existing arbitration clauses should be reviewed for compatibility. |
| October 2025 – ongoing 2026 | Institutional guidance from CIETAC and local arbitration commissions | Practice notes on interim measures, institutional procedures and filing requirements expected; galleries and auction houses should monitor updates from their designated institution. |
For art-sector practitioners, the following provisions of the revised law deserve particular scrutiny:
Under the new law, both arbitral institutions and arbitral tribunals now have the power to decide whether an arbitration agreement is valid. This reform addresses a longstanding friction point: under the 1994 law, parties seeking to challenge the validity of an arbitration clause could only apply to a court, often causing delays and tactical obstruction. According to the Harvard HIALSA overview of the reforms, Article 31 now allows a decision on validity to be submitted to the “arbitral institution” or to the “arbitral tribunal,” aligning China’s approach more closely with international competence–competence principles.
In the art sector, disputes over whether an arbitration clause covers a particular claim, for example, an authentication disagreement arising from a consignment contract, are common. Under the prior regime, a respondent could stall proceedings by challenging the clause’s validity in court. The revised law reduces this risk by giving the arbitral body itself the authority to decide.
Courts are not entirely removed from the equation. Where a party applies to a court before the arbitral institution has accepted the case, the court may still rule on validity. The practical implication is that the timing of the application matters. Industry observers expect that well-drafted clauses will now more reliably keep disputes within the arbitral framework, provided parties act promptly to file with their chosen institution.
Interim measures are often the most time-sensitive element in any art dispute. A painting on loan may be about to leave the country. A consigned sculpture may be at risk of sale to a third party. Evidence of provenance may be about to be destroyed. The revised China arbitration law significantly strengthens the interim-measures toolkit available during arbitral proceedings.
Under the revised framework, parties may apply for interim measures through their arbitral institution, which may in turn refer the application to a competent court for enforcement. Courts retain the power to enforce preservation orders, meaning that an order from the arbitral institution alone may not be self-executing, court backing is typically required for physical enforcement on the ground. Practitioners should anticipate a two-step process:
Where art is physically located outside mainland China, or where interim measures are ordered by a foreign tribunal, enforcement within China remains subject to court approval. The likely practical effect will be that cross-border exhibition contracts need to pre-designate a competent court in the jurisdiction where the work will be located, alongside the arbitral institution, to ensure measures can be sought and enforced without delay.
Emergency action checklist, when a loaned work is threatened:
An arbitral award in China is considered final once it is issued. It cannot be appealed on the merits. However, the enforcement pathway differs depending on whether the award is domestic or foreign, and the revised law introduces several procedural refinements that affect the speed and reliability of enforcement in art disputes.
For awards rendered by Chinese arbitral institutions (e.g., CIETAC, Beijing Arbitration Commission, Shanghai Arbitration Commission), enforcement is sought through the competent People’s Court. The process generally involves:
China is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Foreign awards (i.e., awards rendered outside mainland China) can be enforced through Chinese courts, subject to the Convention’s grounds for refusal. Galleries and collectors enforcing foreign awards in China should:
Courts may set aside or refuse enforcement of an award on limited grounds, including lack of a valid arbitration agreement, improper notice to a party, the tribunal exceeding its jurisdiction, procedural irregularity or public policy violations. In art disputes, the most commonly invoked defences tend to be jurisdictional challenges (arguing the arbitration clause did not cover the claim) and public policy objections (particularly where state cultural relics are involved).
| Award Type | Enforcement Path | Typical Timeline | Key Risk for Art Sector |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic (CIETAC / local commission) | People’s Court at respondent’s domicile or asset location | 3–6 months (estimated) | Respondent may dissipate assets; seek parallel preservation orders |
| Foreign (New York Convention) | Intermediate People’s Court | 6–12 months (estimated) | Translation/authentication delays; public policy defence may be raised for cultural property |
| Hong Kong / Macau awards | Arrangement on Mutual Enforcement | 4–9 months (estimated) | Separate procedural regime; confirm applicability before selecting seat |
Practical tip: Early asset identification and parallel preservation applications are essential in art disputes, where a single high-value work may be the only meaningful asset. Do not wait for the award to be rendered before securing the object.
Updating arbitration clauses in art contracts is the single most important compliance step for galleries, auction houses and collectors following the entry into force of the revised China arbitration law. Below are sector-specific clause templates with commentary on key redline items.
Sample clause:
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Exhibition Loan Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by [CIETAC / specify institution] in accordance with its arbitration rules in force at the date of the notice of arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be [Beijing / Shanghai / specify]. The language of arbitration shall be [Chinese / English / both]. The tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s). The parties agree that either party may apply to the arbitral institution and/or a competent People’s Court for interim measures, including property preservation and evidence preservation, before or during arbitral proceedings.
This clause shall survive termination of this Agreement.
Redline notes:
Sample clause:
“All disputes arising from or in connection with this Consignment Agreement, including disputes relating to the authenticity, provenance, condition or sale proceeds of any consigned work, shall be resolved by arbitration under the rules of [CIETAC / specify]. The seat shall be [specify city]. The tribunal may order consolidation of related disputes arising under connected contracts between the same parties. The proceedings and any award shall be confidential.”
Redline notes:
Sample clause:
“Any dispute relating to the authentication, attribution or provenance of the Work shall be referred to arbitration under the rules of [specify institution], with the seat in [specify]. The tribunal may appoint an independent expert in art authentication. Intellectual property claims relating to the Work’s reproduction rights are excluded from this clause and shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the competent People’s Court.”
Redline notes:
Not every art dispute in China can or should be resolved through arbitration. Certain categories of claims involve mandatory court jurisdiction, public-interest considerations or criminal-law interfaces that make arbitration inappropriate or unenforceable.
Disputes involving state cultural relics, objects classified and protected under China’s Cultural Relics Protection Law, may fall outside the scope of arbitration. Where the state has a direct interest in the ownership, export or return of a protected object, courts may assert mandatory jurisdiction regardless of any arbitration clause in the underlying contract. Pre-transaction due diligence on the cultural-relics classification of any object is essential.
Chinese courts may refuse to enforce an arbitral award, or decline to recognise a foreign award, on public policy grounds. In the cultural-property context, this defence is most likely to arise where an award purports to transfer ownership of an export-restricted object or contravenes heritage-protection legislation. The likely practical effect will be that any dispute with a significant cultural-patrimony dimension should be assessed for public policy risk before the dispute-resolution pathway is selected.
If any of these flags are present, court jurisdiction, or a hybrid approach combining arbitration for commercial claims with court jurisdiction for cultural-property and regulatory issues, may be necessary.
The revised Arbitration Law creates both opportunities and obligations for every participant in China’s art market. Galleries, artists, auction houses and collectors who update their arbitration clauses, build interim-measures protocols into their contracts, verify the arbitrability of cultural-property transactions and engage qualified local counsel will be positioned to resolve disputes faster and enforce outcomes more reliably. The rules have changed, contracts must change with them. Those who treat art arbitration in China as a compliance priority rather than an afterthought will hold a decisive advantage as the new framework matures through 2026 and beyond.
Last reviewed: 11 May 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yingzi Liu at Hylands Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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